Most Of The Brightest Stars Have Arabic Names. Did You Know it?
By Cinthia Mascarell
Many of the names of the stars known today have origin in the Arabic language, since they were given names during the Golden Age of Islam. This article contains a list of 165 star names.
For Western astronomy most of the accepted star names are Arabic, a few are Greek and some are of unknown orign. Typicaly only bright stars have names.
Many stars and constellations bear names whose meanings date back to ancient mythologies; For example, the prominent figure of Orion is related to the tradition of the ancient Greeks, Sumerians and many others.
While constellations generally form images of people or animals in various myths, the names of the stars are rather the product of a mixed bag. The majority is related to its constellation, for example, the name of the star Deneb means “tail” and it is because the star forms the “tail” of the constellation called Cygnus, the Swan. Others describe the star itself, as the name Sirius, which literally translates as “scorching”, appropriate enough for the brightest star in the sky. Then there are a few that seem completely out of place: The constellation Lepus, the Hare, includes a star called Nihal, which means “camels that quench their thirst,” maybe because that star was in a previous and unrelated constellation?
Many star names are Arabic, in which the prefix al means “the” and it often appears before the word, for example, Algol, “The Ghoul.” Its inclusion has become somewhat arbitrary over time; Several of these names are given in other places with or without the prefix Al-. Most of the other names in the Western tradition have Greek or Latin origins.
Astronomy in the Medieval Islamic World
Islamic astronomy encompasses astronomical developments in the Islamic world, especially those that took place during the Islamic Golden Age (IX-XIII centuries), and they are mostly written in the Arabic language.
Islamic astronomy was key in the revival of Byzantine and European astronomy after the loss of knowledge during the early medieval period. This renaissance was made especially through Latin translations of Arabic works during the twelfth century. Islamic astronomy also influenced Chinese and Malian astronomy.
A significant number of stars in the sky, such as Aldebaran, Altair and Deneb, and astronomical terms such as alidada, azimuth and nadir, are still mentioned by their Arabic names. A large corpus of Islamic astronomy literature remains today, with approximately 10,000 manuscripts scattered throughout the world, many of which have not been read or cataloged. Even so, a reasonably accurate picture of Islamic activity in the field of astronomy can be reconstructed.
The History of the Arabic Names of the Stars
More than a thousand years ago, even before Islam, the inhabitants of the Arabian peninsula observed the sky and gave names to the stars. That is why the oldest names of the stars are Arabic.
Ptolemy, the Greek astronomer who lived and worked around 100-178 CE. in Alexandria, Egypt, compiled the ancient Greek descriptions of 1,025 stars in his famous book, the Almagest. The Almagest is a mathematical and astronomical treatise in Greek from the second century on the visible movements of stars and planetary paths.
Ptolemy’s catalog of stars was organized into 48 constellations, estimating their brightness, based largely on the observations of previous Greek astronomers, such as Hipparchus.
Ptolemy’s book was translated into Arabic in the eighth and ninth centuries and also became famous in Europe. Many of the descriptions of the stars in Arabic in the Almagest became widely used as star names.
Ptolemy identified the stars according to their position within a family constellation or asterism, for example, the name of the star “in the right shoulder of The Hunter (Orion)”. Muslim astronomers adopted some of these as proper names of the stars and also added names of the traditional Arab stellar lore. And they wrote down everything in records.
The most notable of these records is the Book of Fixed Stars written by Muslim astronomer Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi (known as Azophi in the West). In the book, thoroughly illustrated, observations and descriptions of the stars, their positions, their magnitudes and their color appear. Two drawings are provided for each constellation, one from the outside of a celestial globe, and another from the inside.
According to Paul Kunitzsch, German authority on Arabic star names, the local traditions of the people in the Islamic lands in the Arabian peninsula and in the Middle East already had their own names for several bright stars such as the Aldebaran, and commonly considered that the stars that were alone represented animals or people. For example, the stars we know as Alpha and Beta Ophiuchi were known to them as a shepherd and his dog, while the stars that were around represented a field with sheep. Some of the Arabic names were already so many centuries old that their meanings were lost even to al-Sufi and his contemporaries, and they are still unknown. Other star names used by al-Sufi and his contemporaries were direct Arabic translations of Ptolemy’s descriptions. For example, the name of the star Fomalhaut comes from the Arabic meaning “mouth of the southern fish”, which is where Ptolemy had described it in his book Almagest.
In Europe, during the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, several old star names were copied or translated incorrectly because some of the translators or writers did not know the Arabic language very well. As a result, the history of a star’s name can be complicated.
Even with these shortcomings, the Arab origin of most of the names of stars adopted since the Renaissance is still evident. In 1603, German astronomer Johann Bayer (1572-1625) instituted a system of assigning Greek letters to stars (Bayer designation), consisting of a lowercase Greek letter followed by the genitive name of the constellation. The letters are usually assigned to the stars in the order of their brightness within a given constellation. For instance, the brightest star in a constellation “Alpha” was rendered as “the second Beta,” and so on. To the Greek letter name is appended the Latin possessive form of the constellation name. Thus the brightest star in Lyra, Vega (an Arabic proper name), becomes Alpha of Lyra or Alpha Lyrae (where “Lyrae” means “of Lyra”).
Modern astronomers study many stars too weak to see without a telescope, and they are so numerous that they are only known by numbers and coordinates. As a result, official star names are essentially limited to old names.
Table with Star Names
I present a list of Arabic star names. This list does not contain all the names of stars documented in the Arabic nomenclature. Also note that some stars may have more than one Arabic name, and that some star names may be composed of Arabic and Latin words, such as: Alula Australis – (Xi UMa).
No. | Proper Name | Arabic Name | Meaning | Star |
---|---|---|---|---|
01 | Acamar | Akhir an-Nahr | End of the river | Theta Eri |
02 | Achernar | Akhir an-Nahr | End of the river | Alpha Eri |
03 | Acrab | Al-‘Aqrab | The scorpion | Beta Sco |
04 | Acubens | Az-Zubana | The claw | Alpha Cnc |
05 | Adhafera | Ad-Dafirah | The curl | Zeta Leo |
06 | Adhara | Al-‘Adhara | The maidens | Epsilon CMa |
07 | Ain | ‘Ain | “Eye” of the Bull | Epsilon Tau |
08 | Albali | Al-Bali’ | The swallower | Epsilon Aqr |
09 | Alchibah | Al-Khiba’ | The tent | Alpha Crv |
10 | Aldebaran | Ad-Dabaran | “Follower” of the Pleiades | Alpha Tau |
11 | Alderamin | Adh-Dhira’ al-Yamin ? | The right forearm ? | Alpha Cep |
12 | Alfirk | Al-Firq | The flock | Beta Cep |
13 | Algedi | Al-Jady | The goat | Alpha Cap |
14 | Algenib | Al-Janb | The flank | Gamma Peg |
15 | Algieba | Al-Jabhah | “The forehead” of the lion | Gamma Leo |
16 | Algebar | Al-Jabbar | The giant | Beta Ori |
17 | Algol | Al-Ghul | The ghoul | Beta Per |
18 | Algorab | Al-Ghurab | The raven | Delta Crv |
19 | Alhena | Al-Han’ah | The brand-mark | Gamma Gem |
20 | Alioth | Al-Jawn | The black horse | Epsilon UMa |
21 | Alkaid | Al-Qa’id | “Leader” of the mourning maidens | Eta UMa |
22 | Alkes | Al-Ka’s | The cup | Alpha Crt |
23 | Almak | ‘Anaq al-Ard | Earth-kid | Gamma And |
24 | Almeisan | Al-Maisan | The shining one | Gamma Gem |
25 | Alnair | An-Nayyir | The bright one | Alpha Gru |
26 | Alnair | An-Nayyir | The bright one | Zeta Cen |
27 | Alnilam | An-Nidham | The string of pearls | Epsilon Ori |
28 | Alnitak | An-Nitaq | The belt | Zeta Ori |
29 | Alphard | Al-Fard | The solitary one | Alpha Hya |
30 | Alphecca | Al-Fakkah | “The broken” ring of stars | Alpha CrB |
31 | Alpheratz | Surrat al-Faras | Navel of the steed | Alpha And |
32 | Alsafi | Al-Athafi | “The tripods” for cooking on | Sigma Dra |
33 | Alsuhail | Suhail | Un-translated | Lambda Vel |
34 | Altair | At-Ta’ir | “The flying” eagle | Alpha Aql |
35 | Altais | At-Tinnin | The great serpent | Delta Dra |
36 | Alterf | At-Tarf | “The glance” of the lion | Lambda Leo |
37 | Aludra | Al-‘Udhrah | The maidenhead | Eta CMa |
38 | Alula Australis | Al-Qafzah al-Ula | The southern one of “the first leap” | Xi UMa |
39 | Alula Borealis | Al-Qafzah al-Ula | The northern one of “the first leap” | Nu UMa |
40 | Alya | Al-Alyah | The fatty tail of a sheep | Theta Ser |
41 | Angetenar | ‘Arjat an-Nahr | Curve of the river | Tau2 Eri |
42 | Ankaa | Al-‘Anka’ | Phoenix | Alpha Phe |
43 | Arkab | Al-‘Urqub | The heel-tendon | Beta Sgr |
44 | Arneb | Al-Arnab | The hare | Alpha Lep |
45 | Arrakis | Ar-Raqis | The dancer | Mu Dra |
46 | Atik | Al-‘Atiq | “The shoulder” of the Pleiades | Omicron Per |
47 | Auva | Al-‘Awwa’ | The barker | Delta Vir |
48 | Azha | Al-Udhi | The hatching-place | Eta Eri |
49 | Baham | Al-Biham | The livestock | Theta Peg |
50 | Baten Kaitos | Batn Qaytus | Belly of Cetus | Zeta Cet |
51 | Beid | Al-Baid | The eggs | Omicron1 Eri |
52 | Benetnash | Banat Na’sh | Daughters of the bier | Eta UMa |
53 | Betelgeuse | Yad al-Jauza’ | Hand of Orion | Alpha Ori |
54 | Botein | Al-Butain | The little belly | Delta Ari |
55 | Caph | Al-Kaff | “The palm” of the Pleiades | Beta Cas |
56 | Celbalrai | Kalb ar-Ra’i | The shepherd’s dog | Beta Oph |
57 | Chort | Al-Kharat | The rib | Theta Leo |
58 | Cursa | Al-Kursi | The chair | Beta Eri |
59 | Dabih | Sa’d adh-dhabih | The lucky star of “the slaughterer” | Beta Cap |
60 | Deneb | Dhanab ad-Dajajah | Tail of the hen | Alpha Cyg |
61 | Deneb | Dhanab ad-Dulfin | Tail of the Dolphin | Epsilon Del |
62 | Deneb Algedi | Dhanab al-Jady | Tail of the goat | Delta Cap |
63 | Deneb Kaitos | Dhanab Qaytus | Tail of Cetus | Beta Cet |
64 | Denebola | Dhanab al-Asad | Tail of the lion | Beta Leo |
65 | Diphda | Ad-Difdi’ | The frog | Beta Cet |
67 | Dschubba | Al-Jabhah | “The forehead” of the scorpion | Delta Sco |
68 | Dubhe | Ad-Dubb | The bear | Alpha UMa |
69 | Dziban | Adh-Dhi’ban | The two wolves | Psi Dra |
70 | Edasich | Adh-Dhikh | The hyena | Iota Dra |
71 | El Nath | An-Nath | The butting | Beta Tau |
72 | Eltanin | At-Tinnin | The great serpent | Gamma Dra |
73 | Enif | Al-Anf | The nose | Epsilon Peg |
74 | Errai | Ar-Ra’i | The shepherd | Gamma Cep |
75 | Fomalhaut | Fam al-Hut | Mouth of the fish | Alpha PsA |
76 | Furud | Al-Furud | “Individual” stars | Zeta CMa |
77 | Gienah | Al-Janah | The wing | Gamma Crv |
78 | Gienah | Al-Janah | The wing | Epsilon Cyg |
79 | Gomeisa | Al-Ghumaisa’ | The bleary-eyed one | Beta CMi |
80 | Hadar | Hadar | Un-translated | Beta Cen |
81 | Hamal | Al-Hamal | The ram | Alpha Ari |
82 | Heka | Al-Haq’ah | The white spot | Lambda Ori |
83 | Homam | Sa’d al-humam | The lucky star of “the high-minded man” | Zeta Peg |
84 | Izar | Al-Izar | The loin-cloth | Epsilon Boo |
85 | Jabbah | Al-Jabhah | “The forehead” of the scorpion | Nu Sco |
86 | Kaffaljidhma | Al-Kaff al-Jadhma’ | The cut-short hand | Gamma Cet |
87 | Kaus Australis | Al-Qaus | The southern one of “the bow” | Epsilon Sgr |
88 | Kaus Borealis | Al-Qaus | The northern one of “the bow” | Lambda Sgr |
89 | Kaus Media | Al-Qaus | The middle one of “the bow” | Delta Sgr |
90 | Keid | Al-Qaid | The broken egg-shells | Omicron2 Eri |
91 | Kitalpha | Qit’at al-Faras | Part of the horse | Alpha Equ |
92 | Kokab | Al-Kaukab | The star | Beta UMi |
93 | Kurhah | Al-Qurhah | “The blaze” on a horse’s brow | Xi Cep |
94 | Lesath | Al-Las’ah | The sting | Upsilon Sco |
95 | Maasym | Al-Mi’sam | The wrist | Lambda Her |
96 | Maaz | Al-Ma’z | The he-goat | Epsilon Aur |
97 | Marfik | Al-Mirfaq | The elbow | Lambda Oph |
98 | Markab | Mankib al-Faras | “The shoulder” of the horse | Alpha Peg |
99 | Matar | Sa’d Matar | The lucky star of “the rain” | Eta Peg |
100 | Mebsuta | Al-Mabsutah | “The outstretched” paw | Epsilon Gem |
101 | Megrez | Al-Maghriz | “The insertion-point” of the Bear’s tail | Delta UMa |
102 | Meissa | Al-Maisan | The shining one | Lambda Ori |
103 | Mekbuda | Al-Maqbudah | “The pulled-in” paw | Zeta Gem |
104 | Menkalinan | Mankib Dhi-al-‘Inan | Shoulder of the rein-holder | Beta Aur |
105 | Menkar | Al-Minkhar | The nostril | Alpha Cet |
106 | Menkib | Al-Mankib | “The shoulder” of the Pleiades | Xi Per |
107 | Merak | Al-Maraqq | The loins | Beta UMa |
108 | Mintaka | Al-Mintaqah | The belt | Delta Ori |
109 | Mirak | Al-Mi’zar | The loin-cloth | Beta And |
110 | Mirfak | Al-Mirfaq | “The elbow” of the Pleiades | Alpha Per |
111 | Mizar | Al-Maraqq | The loins | Zeta UMa |
112 | Mothallah | Al-Muthallath | The triangle | Alpha Tri |
113 | Muphrid | Al-Mufrid | The solitary one | Eta Boo |
114 | Murzim | Al-Murzim | The roarer | Beta CMa |
115 | Nashira | Sa’d Nashirah | The lucky star of Nashirah (un-translated) | Gamma Cap |
116 | Nekkar | Al-Baqqar | The cattleman | Beta Boo |
117 | Nasl | An-Nasl | The arrowhead | Gamma Sgr |
118 | Nihal | An-Nihal | The camels quenching their thirst | Beta Lep |
119 | Nusakan | An-Nasaqan | The two series | Beta CrB |
120 | Okda | Al-‘Uqdah | The knot | Alpha Psc |
121 | Phact | Al-Fakhitah | The dove | Alpha Col |
123 | Phad | Al-Fakhidh | The thigh | Gamma UMa |
124 | Pherkad | Al-Farqad | The calf | Gamma UMi |
125 | Rasalased | Ra’s al-Asad | Head of the lion | Mu Leo |
126 | Rasalgethi | Ra’s al-Jathi | Head of the kneeling one | Alpha Her |
127 | Rasalhague | Ra’s al-Hawwa’ | Head of the snake-man | Alpha Oph |
128 | Rastaban | Ra’s ath-Thu’ban | Head of the snake | Beta Dra |
129 | Rigel | Ar-Rijl | The foot | Beta Ori |
130 | Rigilkent | Rijl Qanturus | Foot of the centaur | Alpha Cen |
131 | Risha | Ar-Risha’ | The rope | Alpha Psc |
132 | Rukbah | Ar-Rukbah | The knee | Delta Cas |
133 | Rukbat | Ar-Rukbah | The knee | Alpha Sgr |
134 | Sabik | As-Sabiq | The preceding | Eta Oph |
135 | Sadachbia | Sa’d al-Akhbiyah | Lucky star of the tents | Gamma Aqr |
136 | Sadalbari | Sa’d al-Bari’ | Lucky star of the excellent one | Mu Peg |
137 | Sadalmelik | Sa’d al-Malik | Lucky star of the king | Alpha Aqr |
138 | Sadalsuud | Sa’d as-Su’ud | Luck of lucks | Beta Aqr |
139 | Sadr | As-Sadr | The breast | Gamma Cyg |
140 | Saiph | As-Saif | The sword | Kappa Ori |
141 | Scheat | As-Saq | The leg | Beta Peg |
142 | Shaula | Ash-Shaulah | The raised tail of the scorpion | Lambda Sco |
143 | Shedir | As-Sadr | The breast | Alpha Cas |
144 | Sheratan | Ash-Sharatan | The two signs | Beta Ari |
145 | Sirrah | Surrat al-Faras | Navel of the steed | Alpha And |
146 | Skat | As-Saq | The leg | Delta Aqr |
147 | Sulafat | As-Sulahfah | The tortoise | Gamma Lyr |
148 | Tania Australis | Ath-Thaniyah | The southern one of “the second” leap | Mu UMa |
149 | Tania Borealis | Ath-Thaniyah | The northern one of “the second” leap | Lambda UMa |
150 | Talitha Australis | Ath-Thalithah | The southern one of “the third” leap | Kappa UMa |
151 | Talitha Borealis | Ath-Thalithah | The northern one of “the third” leap | Iota UMa |
152 | Tarf | At-Tarf | “The glance” of the lion | Beta Cnc |
153 | Thuban | Ath-Thu’ban | The snake | Alpha Dra |
154 | Unukalhai | ‘Unuq al-Hayyah | Neck of the snake | Alpha Ser |
155 | Vega | Al-Waqi’ | “The stooping” eagle | Alpha Lyr |
156 | Wasat | Wasat as-Sama’ | “Middle” of the sky | Delta Gem |
157 | Wazn | Al-Wazn | The weight | Beta Col |
158 | Wezen | Al-Wazn | The weight | Delta CMa |
159 | Yed Prior | Al-Yad | The preceding one of “the hand” | Delta Oph |
160 | Yed Posterior | Al-Yad | The succeeding one of “the hand” | Epsilon Oph |
161 | Zaniah | Az-Zawiyah | The angle | Epsilon Vir |
162 | Zaurac | Az-Zawraq | The boat | Gamma Eri |
163 | Zavijava | Zawiyat al-‘Awwa’ | Angle of the barker | Beta Vir |
164 | Zubenelgenubi | Az-Zuban al-Janubi | The southern claw | Alpha Lib |
165 | Zubeneshamali | Az-Zuban ash-Shamali | The northern claw | Beta Lib |
References:
- «The Astronomical Companion», Guy Ottewell.
- «Short Guide to Modern Star Names and Their Derivations», Paul Kunitzch & Tim Smart (1986).
- «Rasd al-Sama’ » (Observing the Sky), Dr. Abdul-Rahim Bader.
https://www.astronomycenter.net/star.html
Saliba, George, A History of Arabic Astronomy: Planetary Theories During the Golden Age of Islam, New York University Press
List of Arabic star names: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Arabic_star_names
Gingerich, Owen, «Islamic astronomy»: https://web.archive.org/web/20110101211150/http://faculty.kfupm.edu.sa/PHYS/alshukri/PHYS215/Islamic_astronomy.htm
Leichter, Joseph. The Zij as-Sanjari of Gregory Chioniades: https://archive.org/details/TheZijAs-sanjariOfGregoryChioniades
Holbrook, Jarita; Medupe, Rodney Thebe; Urama, Johnson O., African Cultural Astronomy: Current Archaeoastronomy and Ethnoastronomy research in Africa: https://books.google.com/books?id=4DJpDW6IAukC&pg=PA180
Islamic Crescents’ Observation Project, Arabic Star Names: http://www.icoproject.org/star.html
Lebling, Robert W., «Arabic in the Sky»: http://archive.aramcoworld.com/issue/201005/arabic.in.the.sky.htm
Featured Image: Depiction of star patterns fort he Pegasus (al-Faras al-a’zam) constellations from Nasir al-Din al-Tusi’s Tarcama-i Kitab-i Suvaru’l-kevâkib, Süleymaniye Library, MS Ayasofya 2595, fol. 37a.